More than 100 cats and dogs were seized Thursday from a feces-filled Balch Springs property that officials have investigated before for animal cruelty.

The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals of Texas and Balch Springs Animal Services found 57 cats, 36 kittens, 11 dogs and a bird on the property.

Some cats were found confined to crates full of feces, and others were roaming freely around the house, including in a room where two dead cats were found.

(Courtesy/SPCA of Texas)

Animal services reached out to the SPCA on May 23 after receiving information that several cats covered in urine and feces were at the home. When an investigator went to the home Tuesday, feces and ammonia could be smelled from outside the house and garage, the SPCA said.

Some cats were roaming in rooms splattered with feces and urine, and two dead cats were on the floor. One cat was in a small glass fish tank and another was missing an eye, the SPCA said.

More cats were found in a garage, some confined to crates full of feces. The dogs had also mostly been confined to crates in a separate room.

Some animals were underweight and had fleas, long nails and eye and nasal discharge. A kitten had a bloody nose, and another had to get fluids at the scene, the SPCA said.

Additional dead cats were found wrapped in grocery bags in a trash can, but were so badly decomposed they could not be removed.

Animal services reached out to the SPCA on May 23 after receiving information that several cats covered in urine and feces were at the home.

(Courtesy/SPCA of Texas)

The living animals were taken to the Russell E. Dealey Animal Rescue Center in Dallas. Necropsies will be performed on two of the dead cats to determine how they died.

The animals will be examined and cared for until a custody hearing June 7 at the Dallas County Government Center in Lancaster.

It's not the first time the SPCA has been to the property.

In August 2015, more than 150 animals were seized including 102 live cats and five dead ones, 40 dogs and two chickens. Dozens of dead animals were also found, the SPCA said.

The owner was charged with cruelty to non-livestock animals and pleaded guilty. Charges are expected in Thursday's case as well.